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  • Unknown's avatar

    seandodson 4:44 pm on March 12, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , free beer, free software, gimp, goo-oo, , , open source, open source analysis, openoffice, , richard stallman, software,   

    Why the recession means boom time for free software 

    Forgive the self-linkage, but I want to direct you to my recent feature in this week’s Guardian Technology supplement. It examines the recent growth of free software around the world and wonders if the recession is the main reasons for its surge in popularity:

    “Richard Stallman once wrote that the point about free software is it is “free as in freedom, not free as in beer”, meaning that people should be at liberty to do as they pleased with software, rather than subscribe to its restrictive licences. As the recession takes hold, the stress may be on the second half of his now-famous aphorism. To the millions downloading free software in a recession, the point is that it is free – as in free beer.”

     
    • عبد الله المصري's avatar

      عبد الله المصري 11:06 pm on June 28, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      Thanks for this post, it’s useful for me
      i hope i see more free software like this
      __________________
      pedagangit
      pedagangit – linktrackr

    • mywalletmarket's avatar

      mywalletmarketcom 5:05 pm on April 6, 2011 Permalink | Reply

      I am using the world’s best online TV viewing software. Spend a lot of time at the computer. For this reason than to watch tv on pc software is required. Thousands of HD channels, TV shows, series, movies all in one software. I searched and really did a very good choice. Don’t pay cable television fees for one year. You still pay them at once and watch tv free from your computer. Once you get use to life.

  • Unknown's avatar

    seandodson 12:05 am on July 22, 2008 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , broadcast, code, , democracy, , , open democracy, open source, , programming, renaissance,   

    Douglas Rushkoff: the next renaissance belongs to the network 

    Douglas Rushkoff’s recent speech on the potential for a type of “open source democracy” is worthy of recommendation. It is a really good speech. He believes that the recent advances in network technology offer something of a new renaissance. He gave this keynote last week at the Personal Democracy Forum in New York. It has such an effect that the whole organisation subsequently changed its name to the Participatory Democracy Forum.

    Here’s a digest of his argument:

    1. Personal democracy is an oxymoron. Democracy is about others.

    2. But since the renaissance, much has been focused on the individual. This has proved one of the main obstacles towards a true democracy.

    3. Because once we understood ourselves as individuals, we understood ourselves as having rights. The Rights of Man. A right to property. The right to personal freedom.

    4. But paradoxically, this led to more centralised authority: as individuals become concerned with their personal stakes, their former power as a collective moves to central authorities: divide and conquer.

    5. The media of the renaissance: the printing press (and by extension all broadcast media) are very good at perpetuating the myth of the self – individual interest.

    The next renaissance (if there is one)—the phenomenon we’re talking about … is not about the individual at all, but about the networked group. The possibility for collective action. The technologies we’re using—the biases of these media—cede central authority to decentralized groups. Instead of moving power to the center, they tend to move power to the edges. Instead of creating value from the center—like a centrally issued currency—the network creates value from the periphery.

    I concur with much of this … but Rushkoff offers a wise kicker: it is the art of programming – not writing or blogging – that ushers in this new epoch …

    “Writing is not the capability being offered us by these tools at all. The capability is programming—which almost none of us really know how to do. We simply use the programs that have been made for us, and enter our blog text in the appropriate box on the screen. Nothing against the strides made by citizen bloggers and journalists, but big deal. Let them eat blog.”

     
  • Unknown's avatar

    seandodson 12:02 pm on July 3, 2008 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , invention, , open source, , , self-replication,   

    The machine that copies itself 

    Self-linkage: From today’s Technology Guardian, my interview with Dr Adrian Bowyer of the University of Bath and inventor of the RepRap machine.

    “Technically, the RepRap is a form of rapid prototyper, the kind used by designers and engineers to streamline everything from aircraft to hairdryers, but it’s easier to think of it as a printer of three-dimensional objects. Essentially, the RepRap works like the desktop printer you might have at home, but instead of printing on paper, the RepRap makes hard copy in three dimensions out of plastic from models designed on a computer.”

     
  • Unknown's avatar

    seandodson 2:51 pm on June 12, 2008 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Cheltenham Science Festival, , , open source, , , singularity, skynet, , terminator, Vik Olliver   

    RepRap: Here comes the age of self-replicating machines 

    To Bath to meet Dr Adrian Bowyer, the father of the world’s first self-replicating machine. The RepRapis a kind of 3-D printer that can fashion fairly crude objects out of molten plastic.  Last week, Bowyer appeared at the Cheltenham Science Festival with Vik Olliver and a pair of RepRaps.  The Second machine had been partially (though significantly) fabricated from a “parent” machine.  The pair are claiming it as a major step forward towards a self-replicating machine.

    Talk to most lay-people about self-replicating machines and most start talking about Terminator movies and the fictional Skynet computer that will eventually take over the world. Delightful nonsense of course, but self-replicating machines could eventually assist developing countries develop a cheaper form of manufacture.

    Like his original RepRap machine, Bowyer is the father of the RepRap rather than the inventor. Although he came up with the concept, many others have contributed. It was Olliver’s machine that begot the first “child”, not Bowyer’s. This is because Bowyer has open sourced his ideas, effectively giving them to the whole world and waving goodbye to potential profits. Although as he told me, its very difficult to make money from a self-replicating machine. You could probably only sell the first one.  

     
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